Before you talk to insurers or sign anything, focus on protecting the factual record while it’s still fresh.
- Document symptoms and timing at home. Write down when symptoms started, what changed (breathing, alertness, pain level, confusion), and what clinicians advised afterward.
- Request your Quincy-area records early. Ask the facility for anesthesia documentation, monitor/vital sign printouts, medication administration records, operative/procedure notes, and discharge summaries.
- Get follow-up care that creates a paper trail. If you’re seeing a new provider after returning to Quincy, make sure they record the history of the anesthesia event and ongoing effects.
This matters in Illinois because medical records and chart narratives become the backbone of how negligence is evaluated—especially when patients first notice problems after they leave the operating room.


